Calgary Herald

Leicester back in the shadows after club’s fairy tale journey of triumph

- STEVE DOUGLAS The Associated Press

This time last year, Leicester’s players were returning to the Premier League as defending champions and getting ready to launch the club’s first foray into the Champions League.

Twelve months on and they are little more than afterthoug­hts in English soccer’s fast-changing narrative.

The whirlwind of the last three years — an unlikely escape from relegation in 2014-15, winning the title at odds of 5,000-1 the following season, then reaching the Champions League quarter-finals — has now given way to mundanity. Leicester is once again in the shadows of the country’s top teams ahead of the new campaign.

If we can be strong as a group and pick up some serious points, it’ll give us a massive sense of confidence going forward …

Craig Shakespear­e, the coach, spoke Wednesday of being “competitiv­e” this season. He had to field questions about the potential departure of star winger Riyad Mahrez and midfield enforcer Danny Drinkwater.

It’s a dose of reality for a modest team from central England that produced one of English soccer’s greatest fairy tales.

“The roller-coaster, the highs and lows,” Shakespear­e said, “I’ve enjoyed every minute of it.”

What will the latest chapter of the Leicester story bring? Consolidat­ion, while hardly exciting, would be a good start.

Staying up used to be the club’s main target, but it can aim for better than that. Leicester recovered from a dreadful start to finish in 12th place last season in a year when playing in the Champions League was the clear priority.

Therefore, the top 10 should be reachable, especially as the squad has been strengthen­ed by the offseason signings of striker Kelechi Iheanacho from Manchester City, midfielder Vicente Iborra from Sevilla and centre back Harry Maguire from Hull.

It will hardly match the thrill of a title chase, but for a club that was in the third tier as recently as 2009, the value of becoming an establishe­d Premier League team should not be overlooked.

“Premier League survival is good,” Shakespear­e said, “but I look at the squad and the players we’re trying to attract — I want to be better than that and I think the players want to be better than that.”

The arrival of Iheanacho could lead to the breakup of the establishe­d attacking partnershi­p of Jamie Vardy and Shinji Okazaki. Maguire is likely to replace Robert Huth as the partner for captain Wes Morgan in central defence, and young left back Ben Chilwell should get more games this season.

Leicester visits Arsenal on Friday for the opening match of the Premier League season, and plays Manchester United, Chelsea and Liverpool in its first six fixtures.

“If we can be strong as a group and pick up some serious points,” assistant coach Michael Appleton said, “it’ll give us a massive sense of confidence going forward knowing that we can compete with the big teams in the league.”

 ?? MICHAEL REGAN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Leicester manager Craig Shakespear­e, left, has led a team that went from escaping relegation in 2014-15 to reaching the Champions League quarterfin­als.
MICHAEL REGAN/GETTY IMAGES Leicester manager Craig Shakespear­e, left, has led a team that went from escaping relegation in 2014-15 to reaching the Champions League quarterfin­als.

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